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Forest Products Employees Hit Capitol Hill to Share Local Impacts of Legislation, Regulations

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Workers employed in the U.S. forest products industry visited Washington, D.C., USA, this week. Their goal was to meet with their members of Congress and administration officials to educate them on the impact of legislative and regulatory decisions both on the environment and on the families and communities that depend on forest products manufacturing for their livelihood.

The Pulp & Paperworkers' Resource Council (PPRC) is a grassroots organization of hourly employees of the forest products industry who educate on issues that impact jobs in their industry. More than 83 PPRC members from across the U.S. were in Washington this week to discuss several issues including the regulatory burden impacting American manufacturing, the carbon neutrality of biomass and manufacturing byproducts, renewable energy, clean water, and ensuring the competitiveness of the U.S. forest products industry.

In addition to meeting with their members of Congress, PPRC members met with administration officials of the CEQ, OMB, EPA, Senate Minority Whip Cornyn, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, Honorable Steny Hoyer-Democratic Whip, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, Speaker of the House Boehner, and the Forest Service. During their three days of meetings, PPRC members made 316 legislative and administration visits.

"We began most of our visits thanking our elected congressional representatives for passing a Farm Bill last week," said Patti Barber, PPRC chairwoman. "That bill is vitally important to our industry and addressed concerns that we discussed last year with congressional leaders, including product labeling that had benefitted foreign manufacturers while excluding U.S.-made forest products, as well as preserving EPA's treatment of forest roads as non-point sources under the Clean Water Act. At a time when everyone in our country is concerned about the loss of family-wage manufacturing jobs, the health and competitiveness of our U.S. forest products industry is important to our nation's economy. Our industry represents nearly 5% of the total U.S. manufacturing GDP; it employs about 900,000 people – many in small, rural communities; generates total wages of approximately $50 billion in communities across our country; and is among the top 10 manufacturing sector employers in 47 states."

Issues that PPRC members addressed included:

  • Carbon Neutrality. The forest products industry is a major contributor in offsetting the accumulation of greenhouse gases. Trees and forest products store carbon. About two-thirds of the energy produced in the pulp and paper industry is generated from wood residuals like bark, spent pulping liquors, fines, etc. Energy from sustainably managed biomass is carbon neutral and needs to be recognized as such.
  • Biomass/Renewable Energy. The forest products industry has always sought to use the "whole tree." Fibers from the tree are used to manufacture high-value pulp and paper products. The waste byproducts are used to create energy through co-generation. Free markets, not government mandates and incentives, should determine the highest value use of wood.
  • Cumulative Regulatory Burden. EPA should examine the sustainability of its regulatory program to embrace a balanced approach so costly air and other regulations will protect the public's health while preserving family-wage manufacturing jobs. Numerous pending regulations and restrictive permitting policies that discourage mill upgrades could cost thousands of American manufacturing jobs and billions in capital expenditures.
  • Clean Water. The Clean Water Act and its implementing regulations are one of our nation's most successful and wide-ranging environmental programs. The program regulates pollution at its source and involves a comprehensive federal and state regulatory system for issuance of permits and water quality standards. Issuing the administration's Draft Proposed Rule would radically impact the original intent of the Clean Water Act, expanding authority beyond "navigable" waters and even include agricultural field ditches and other water bodies and ditches that have been manmade. Should the proposed rule move forward unchanged, the economic impacts across nearly every sector of the economy and the strain on our states would be substantial.
  • Paper Options. American workers in the forest products industry support policies that recognize paper-based communications as critically important for millions of Americans. The move to digitize all forms of communication disadvantages nearly 30% of U.S. households without Internet access, 45% of seniors who do not own a computer, and 8% of the population who choose not to maintain a bank account. The PPRC believes people should be able to choose the manner in which they receive information and services from the federal government.
  • Truck Weights. The PPRC supports legislation to allow states to increase the weight limit on trucks traveling on interstate highways.

"The vital work of the PPRC is to help elected and appointed officials understand how critical the forest products industry is to the health of the U.S. economy and the environment. We believe in balancing our environmental needs while securing existing manufacturing-based jobs in our local communities," Barber said.

The U.S. is one of the world's most diverse exporters of sustainable forest products. Exports account for about 15% of total U.S. forest products sales, and exports of paper and paperboard exceeded imports by about 20% in 2013. The industry also generates economic benefits from indirect exports–such as domestic sales of paper, paperboard, and wood packaging materials–that are used to package and transport goods exported by other U.S. industries.

More information is available online.

 

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